Opportunistic Brad Keselowski wins Chase race at Charlotte
Oct. 12, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
CONCORD, N.C.—Brad Keselowski proved once again Saturday night that quality and timing trump quantity.
Keselowski
led 11 laps in Saturday night’s Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor
Speedway. Kasey Kahne led 138. Five-time champion Jimmie Johnson led
130.
But
Keselowski overcame a loose wheel and a jack that spent a lap under the
side of his car to win the fifth race in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint
Cup, as a late caution
squelched Johnson’s march toward the series lead.
Keselowski,
the reigning series champion, won for the first time this season, the
first time at Charlotte and the 10th time in his career. On four fresh
tires to Kasey Kahne’s
two after a restart on Lap 312, Keselowski passed for the top spot on
Lap 326 of 334.
Kahne
won a drag race against current series leader Matt Kenseth to hold the
runner-up position. With his third-place run, Kenseth added one point to
his Chase lead over fourth-place
finisher Jimmie Johnson and now holds a four-point edge with five races
left in the Chase.
Kyle
Busch came home fifth, one position ahead of last week’s Kansas winner,
Kevin Harvick, as the Chase reached the halfway point.
What
started as an all-too-familiar comedy of errors for Keselowski’s No. 2
Penske Racing team ended with a checkered flag after a heated battle
against Kahne in the closing
laps. During a pit stop under caution on Lap 87, Keselowski left his
stall with the jack still under his car, and dragged it 1.5 miles until
he returned to pit road, where his team extracted it.
“It was
just a never-give-up night,” Keselowski said in Victory Lane. “We had a
lot of struggles tonight. We didn’t qualify well (23rd), but we kept
working our way forward.
I knew we had a good car. I’m not sure we were as good as the 48
(Johnson) or the 5 (Kahne).
“I
never got to really race them until the end and (Kahne) had two tires,
so I think we were probably pretty even. When (crew chief) Paul (Wolfe)
made the call to take four
tires, and I saw we were that close to the front, I knew we could get
them.”
Keselowski,
the first non-Chase driver to win a Chase event since Kahne
accomplished the feat at Phoenix in November 2011, but that sort of
statistic was the farthest thing
from team owner Roger Penske’s mind when he saw the incident with the
jack.
“I thought, ‘Here we go again,’” Penske said. “…But we had Brad behind the wheel.”
Ultimately,
Keselowski’s four fresh tires made the difference, after he got past
Kenseth during an intense battle from laps 315 through 317 and then
tracked down Kahne.
“I was
on two (tires) and he was on four, and he could just move around a
little bit better,” Kahne said. “I was trying to move around, but I was
just a little bit on the tight
side with the front end, then I would get loose if I got the front
working.
“I was
doing all I could and felt pretty good, but he made some nice moves and
just really had some speed there late in the race and was able to get by
me.”
Johnson
was out front by more than two seconds and poised to take over the
series lead when NASCAR called a caution for debris on the backstretch
on Lap 307. The driver of
the No. 48 Chevrolet restarted third on four fresh tires but was
shuffled back to seventh on Lap 312 and spent the rest of the race
working his way back to fourth.
Pole
winner Jeff Gordon, Ryan Newman, Denny Hamlin and Carl Edwards completed
the top 10, as long green-flag runs left only 13 cars on the lead lap
at the finish.
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